Live Review: Deer Tick, The Smoking Flowers, Justin & The Cosmics

28 March 2018 | 6:00 pm | Chris Familton

"They've cleaned up the drunken, raucous side of their live show and, in the process, taken their musicality to another level."

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The swagger and rock hit early with Nashville's Justin & The Cosmics laying down some primal leather- and denim-clad rock'n'roll. The brothers Collins led the charge on guitar and vocals, Justin showing a fine line in deadpan banter, middle finger insouciance and Iggy Pop-inspired physicality in the latter. They had a bit of New York punk and glam, a healthy serving of Detroit ramalama and a nod to Elvis. All in all a refreshing reminder of the power of rhythm, riffs and attitude.

The Smoking Flowers also hail from Nashville but their sound leaned heavily on the boy/girl The White Stripes duo set-up. It's an unavoidable comparison given their make-up, the guitar tones and drumming style. They offered more than just that, though, a brace of songs on acoustic guitar and accordion with raw and intimate vocals on one mic showed Kim and Scott Collins' range and chemistry as they increasingly won over the crowd.

Deer Tick played an infamous show at The Annandale Hotel five years ago. This time around they've cleaned up the drunken, raucous side of their live show and, in the process, taken their musicality to another level. Their set spanned their decade-long career, from Ashamed, the first song on their debut album, to tracks from last year's two releases, some of the strongest songs John McCauley has written to date. Hope Is Big, Only Love, Don't Hurt and Jumpstarting were particular highlights that summed up the range and diversity the band has in their music. From ragged, punk-tinged country rock to tin whistle and mandolin-augmented folk music and on to gloriously uplifting power pop, they cover many bases yet it all works, coming together like a big, rewarding musical puzzle. Vocally, McCauley led the way with his raspy howl and downbeat mumble but guitarist Ian O'Neil and drummer Dennis Ryan also added strong contributions, the latter endearing himself with Me And My Man, a song about his dog. The wide-ranging set wound up with a couple of covers in The Velvet Underground's Pale Blue Eyes and a heartfelt version of Billy Preston's You Are So Beautiful. With the focus firmly on the music, Deer Tick are on a career-high and, judging by the sea of smiles, both band and audience are loving it.